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DATE | 2003-04-12 |
FROM | Ruben I Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] Fwd: [linux-elitists] AOL says goodbye to AT&T/Comcast and residential mail spools [ajs@ajs.com]
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On 2003.04.10 23:19 Aaron Sherman wrote: Hope no one here has friends or relatives that use AOL if you run your home MTA on a residential network.... If you do, you'll have to start relaying mail for AOL through the public relay (probably slow and flaky) that your ISP provides. Why?
AOL has instituted a new policy: TCP sessions established on port 25 to any of their MX hosts from systems that obtain their IP addresses dynamically (their term, I don't know exactly how they define it, since I'm not on any reputable, public dynip BLs that I can find) will be summarily disconnected after the transmission of several lines of text which resemble an SMTP error.
I say "resemble" because the SMTP RFC is clear on their options at this point in a session (e.g. after the transport session has first been established):
The SMTP protocol allows a server to formally reject a transaction while still allowing the initial connection as follows: a 554 response MAY be given in the initial connection opening message instead of the 220. A server taking this approach MUST still wait for the client to send a QUIT (see section 4.1.1.10) before closing the connection and SHOULD respond to any intervening commands with "503 bad sequence of commands". Since an attempt to make an SMTP connection to such a system is probably in error, a server returning a 554 response on connection opening SHOULD provide enough information in the reply text to facilitate debugging of the sending system.
AOL violates this on two major points:
1. They issue a series of 550 responses, not 554, like so:
550-The IP address you are using to connect to AOL is either open to 550-the free relaying of e-mail, is serving as an open proxy, or is a 550-dynamic (residential) IP address. AOL cannot accept further e-mail 550-transactions from your server until either your server is closed to 550-free relaying/proxy, or your ISP removes your IP address from their 550-list of dynamic IP addresses. For additional information, 550-please visit http://postmaster.info.aol.com. 550 Goodbye
2. They then send a reset packet to disconnect the session.
I'm going to look into what it takes to get a site on the various RFC-non-compliance lists, but ultimately, the RFC lossage is not my core beef (though it certainly is indicative of an attitude that has lead us down this path). My concern is that more and more companies and individuals are slicing out those portions of the Internet that they don't think that they would ever want to interact with in relatively blind and poorly managed ways.
You cannot, for example, get your well-behaved mailer removed from the list, since even the initial report that they will send you from their Web-tool is emailed, not to the IP in question, but to root at the domain that registered the IP with ARIN!
How much further down this path of large ISPs slicing out the "unwanted" do we have to see before all ISPs will simply stop passing packets past their own networks which do not originate from their servers or a "registered business partner" of some sort?
I'm recommending to all of my friends and family that (a) it will be a cold day in hell before my mailer config is polluted with a special entry for every ISP that thinks DHCP-assigned IPs aren't really part of the Internet, and (b) unless they have the swing to change AOL's policy on this one, they're better off getting an account with an ISP that might warn them before taking such drastic and harmful actions.
Sorry for the rant, but I'm annoyed as hell over this. Thanks.
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